Deficit up 17%

When the discussion DOESN'T begin with taxing the wealthy it's a dead giveaway that the poster has absolutely no real interest in eliminating national debt.
Are you claiming the wealthy pay no tax? Or did you mean to say they dont pay enough?

I've seen no one advocate a zero tax on the wealthy.
 
Not disagreeing, but there is an argument that high income people are using more or are more dependent on public infrastructure as well....ie, if you own a company that is shipping stuff you are obviously using roads more than a low income person would, etc.

I suspect at the aggregate low income is using more resources, but I don't think its as big of a difference as one would think.
Plus the wealthier you are the more you are benefiting from the protections provided. If you have a 10 million dollar house with 5 million dollars worth of art and jewelry you will have to pay more to protect (insure) those things than someone living in a $20,000 trailer or $500 per month apartment. That extrapolates to military, infrastructure, fire, police, FDA, education, etc. The wealthy has benefited more from the structure of society and stand to lose more should that structure fracture or crumble.
 
It will require addressing both. If you want to start with spending (by one millisecond) then start with spending. We obviously have to have an adequate revenue source.
How do you define "adequate"?
 
Not disagreeing, but there is an argument that high income people are using more or are more dependent on public infrastructure as well....ie, if you own a company that is shipping stuff you are obviously using roads more than a low income person would, etc.

I suspect at the aggregate low income is using more resources, but I don't think its as big of a difference as one would think.

We use the roads and the fuel taxes we pay cover our "fair share". If you are shipping you are paying so that is a false statement.
 
Plus the wealthier you are the more you are benefiting from the protections provided. If you have a 10 million dollar house with 5 million dollars worth of art and jewelry you will have to pay more to protect (insure) those things than someone living in a $20,000 trailer or $500 per month apartment. That extrapolates to military, infrastructure, fire, police, FDA, education, etc. The wealthy has benefited more from the structure of society and stand to lose more should that structure fracture or crumble.

Luther this is complete bullshizz.
 
I would be okay with not increasing tax revenue as long as taxes were paid in an equitable manner.
You dont want equitable. Equitable by definition would be all adults pay a flat amount based on that year's budget. Equitable = equal.
You want inequity in the tax liability levied.
 
  • Like
Reactions: hog88
You havent thought this through. Just threw out something which sounded good. No real numbers.
It doesn't take a lot of thought to know that once you've concluded that you are going in the wrong direction that you need to slow to a stop, turn around, and then head back in the right direction.
It's actually rather conceptually simple.
 
You dont want equitable. Equitable by definition would be all adults pay a flat amount based on that year's budget. Equitable = equal.
You want inequity in the tax liability levied.

Wish I could give this more than 1 like
 
Not disagreeing, but there is an argument that high income people are using more or are more dependent on public infrastructure as well....ie, if you own a company that is shipping stuff you are obviously using roads more than a low income person would, etc.

I suspect at the aggregate low income is using more resources, but I don't think its as big of a difference as one would think.
A beautiful example. The hypothetical person would pay exponentially more in gas tax. Therefore, paying for their increased use of infrastructure. I love your example, too, because whether i roll up in a ferrari or a fiesta, i pay the same amount of tax per gallon.
 
  • Like
Reactions: hog88
Luther this is complete bullshizz.
Not at all. It's sort of the way things work. The more you benefit, the more you pay. The more you stand to lose, the more protection against loss will cost. Rather simple.
 
It doesn't take a lot of thought to know that once you've concluded that you are going in the wrong direction that you need to slow to a stop, turn around, and then head back in the right direction.
It's actually rather conceptually simple.
A simple concept from a simple mind does nothing to put a plan, a real plan together using real numbers derived from historical data. Until then, it is just more of your bloviating.
 
You dont want equitable. Equitable by definition would be all adults pay a flat amount based on that year's budget. Equitable = equal.
You want inequity in the tax liability levied.
I do want equitable, everyone sharing an equal burden. Rather simple.
 
Enough to cover expenditures.
You keep digging a deeper hole for yourself. Expenditures must be controlled by the revenue. Not the other way around.

Your household budget works like that. Hog's business budget works like that. Government can only work like that.
 
Not at all. It's sort of the way things work. The more you benefit, the more you pay. The more you stand to lose, the more protection against loss will cost. Rather simple.

The military (the only federal entity in your list applicable to the discussion) does not protect the wealthy any more than they protect the poor. To the rest, sure they pay more, I'd bet the majority of wealthy people pay for private security. In my case I give to the volunteer fire department to make sure they will come if I need them.
 
A simple concept from a simple mind does nothing to put a plan, a real plan together using real numbers derived from historical data. Until then, it is just more of your bloviating.
You get upset when someone doesn't play by the rules you want to establish? A take the ball and go home kind of guy.
I gave you real numbers (percentages). You may not have liked them, but they were real.
10% reduction in military, 5% reduction to everything else. real
10% reduction in rate of increase in deficit spending. real
No deficit spending after 10 years. real
2% reduction in debt in next year. real

You seem to have a desperate desire to pick something apart. Feel free, go at it.
 
You keep digging a deeper hole for yourself. Expenditures must be controlled by the revenue. Not the other way around.

Your household budget works like that. Hog's business budget works like that. Government can only work like that.
I'm not digging a deeper hole, you just aren't getting the answers for which you are obviously fishing.
There's been plenty of times in my household when he decided to incur an additional expense (car, vacation, finishing the basement) and we increased our revenue accordingly. Simple concept.
 
You get upset when someone doesn't play by the rules you want to establish? A take the ball and go home kind of guy.
I gave you real numbers (percentages). You may not have liked them, but they were real.
10% reduction in military, 5% reduction to everything else. real
10% reduction in rate of increase in deficit spending. real
No deficit spending after 10 years. real
2% reduction in debt in next year. real

You seem to have a desperate desire to pick something apart. Feel free, go at it.
You gave me percentages. Very easy to spitball. Im for all the reduction you can fathom. Ive asked for the real number (in dollars) your percentages represent. You still have nothing. Change of tax code is part of your plan. I asked if that was factored because i saw no increase in revenue based on your idea. When asked directly, you said "sure, i guess". I suspect you dont really want to know how long your "plan" will take to pay off 22T.

Stick to teaching kids. You're out of your depth here.
 
First I've heard of you wanting a head tax. Congratulations. I happen to agree 100%
lol.....you seem to have misinterpreted. I said equitable sharing of the burden. That may be the exact opposite of a head tax. If it brings you comfort, I could accept a small head tax as a small portion of the tax structure.
 
I'm not digging a deeper hole, you just aren't getting the answers for which you are obviously fishing.
There's been plenty of times in my household when he decided to incur an additional expense (car, vacation, finishing the basement) and we increased our revenue accordingly. Simple concept.
Sure, Luther.
 
The military (the only federal entity in your list applicable to the discussion) does not protect the wealthy any more than they protect the poor. To the rest, sure they pay more, I'd bet the majority of wealthy people pay for private security. In my case I give to the volunteer fire department to make sure they will come if I need them.
Sure they do. They protect your life and your property.....and your earning potential.
You should give more to the volunteer fire department than do people with less to risk.
 
Advertisement

Back
Top